This is a remarkable work of journalism. The author gives us a first-rate account of the continual changes in the vast oceans. Much of it is not pretty.
The oceans are unregulated and what laws there are, are transgressed at will. The laws are airy and many countries have “their” ocean areas overlapping with others. The bigger the boat the more power it can have, depending on how its adversary is armed.
This is a personal book where the author takes us with him on patrol boats, with vigilantes like the group Sea Shepherd who cruise frequently in the Antarctic to prevent the illegal trawling of endangered species. Sea Shepherd uses invasive methods like firing darts of some sort or even ramming fishing vessels.
Page 185 (my book)
Over 56 million people globally work at sea on fishing boats. Another 1.6 million work in shipping on freighters, tankers, container ships, and other types of merchant vessels.
Page 186-87
The contract [for fishing vessels] also specified that there would be no overtime, no sick leave, eighteen to twenty-hour days, six day work weeks, and a monthly $50. dollar food deduction.
The most tragic reporting was on slave labour used in fishing boats. Often young men and boys from the Philippines, Indonesia, Cambodia, and Vietnam are lured by promising ads in their local village to serve on these fishing boats. They soon enter a world of bondage where they are ill-fed, and can be beaten at the whim of the officers. Once at sea they are trapped and can stay for years, thinking initially that they would only be serving for a few months. There have also been murders. Thailand is now trying to come to terms with its recruitment and exploitation of foreign workers for its fishing vessels.
For fishing crews there are always deductions on their salaries – for the meager food they are given while on board, the accommodations and a charge for processing their documents. And their salary is often withheld for several months.
Page 192
All the [recruitment] firms [for fishermen] shared a playbook. They used debt, trickery, fear, violence, shame and family ties to recruit, entrap, and leave men at sea, sometimes for years, under harsh conditions.
Page 305
Samson [the leader of the Indonesian patrol boat] allowed me five minutes to explore each boat [that had been seized “in Indonesian waters” with the crew held on the Indonesian boat], and I found myself drawn to the Vietnamese deckhands’ sleeping quarters. I wanted to see what they brought with them. The men slept in a room toward the back of the boats, open to the rear with walls on the other three sides. The ceiling was low enough that the space required even short men to crawl on all fours. There was no privacy and no way to secure belongings, which tended to be crammed into torn plastic grocery bags, eight-ounce cans of Red Bull, packs of Vietnamese cigarettes, an occasional prayer book, muscle ointments… There were no great epiphanies to be had in rifling through their stuff, except for a humbling recognition of how few possessions they brought with them for months at sea.
Page 113
Before my investigator [translator] left the Oyang 75 [South Korean fishing vessel with an Indonesian crew], one of the workers on board, a twenty-eight year old Indonesian man named Purwanto, pulled him aside. Purwanto seemed genuinely puzzled why anyone would take an interest in the conditions of his work, whether he was satisfied and paid. “No one has ever asked about us before,” said Purwanto, who had been working on the ship for a year. “Why do you want know about life on the ship?” he asked. The investigator and union inspector responded that they were simply checking for labor violations. Purwanto said that even if there were violations, it didn’t matter – he needed the job, so he would not say anything more. There was nothing else for him back in Indonesia, he said. “This is the best we can get.”
There is also a discussion on stowaways some of whom are simply tossed overboard, but there is nothing on the migration of Syrians and Africans across the Mediterranean.
There was one interesting, and for me positive story (which reveals my point of view on the subject) of the boat Adelaide that was providing medical abortions for women off the coast of Mexico. It would land in a port and with the women on board, sail off into international waters where the procedure was performed outside of the laws of Mexico.
The author also describes the corruption in the merchant maritime where boats (and I mean large ones) can be repossessed for any number of what I found to be dubious reasons. In some cases, if the crew is owed back-pay they will not get it from the new owner.
There are many different topics covered. The author spent time with a Greenpeace crew that eventually succeeded in preventing oil exploration off the coast of Brazil as there are coral reefs that would inevitably have been impacted. I don’t know the status of this now with Bolsonaro in power in Brazil.
Another rather quirky one is on the Englishman Roy Bates, who in 1966 seized an abandoned World War II tower in international waters off the coast of England. He made it his own independent country called Sealand and eventually passed it onto his sons to manage. It strikes me as a looney libertarian set-up.
When you live on land and possibly just spend a few weeks on or by the ocean whether on a cruise or a charming resort – or simply fly over it at 30,000 feet the massiveness can overwhelm us. It is deceiving because we come to think of it as beyond being polluted, altered, depleted and contaminated – but yet it is – and rapidly so. This book illustrates how this is happening far from our eyes. Its ecology is being transformed with the advent of modern technology. I learnt much from this book. There is a tremendous number of articles cited and people credited, that make us realize that this work of journalism was a collaborative effort.